Emergent trade-offs among plasticity strategies in mixotrophs

被引:0
|
作者
Archibald, Kevin M. [1 ]
Dutkiewicz, Stephanie [2 ,3 ]
Laufkoetter, Charlotte [4 ,5 ]
V. Moeller, Holly [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Santa Barbara, Dept Ecol Evolut & Marine Biol, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 USA
[2] MIT, Dept Earth Atmospher & Planetary Sci, Cambridge, MA USA
[3] MIT, Ctr Global Change Sci, Cambridge, MA USA
[4] Univ Bern, Climate & Environm Phys, Bern, Switzerland
[5] Univ Bern, Oeschger Ctr Climate Change Res, Bern, Switzerland
基金
瑞士国家科学基金会; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Mixotrophy; Metabolic plasticity; Food web model; DEVELOPMENTAL PLASTICITY; PHENOTYPIC PLASTICITY; PHYTOPLANKTON GROWTH; FUNCTIONAL TRAITS; PROTISTS; STOICHIOMETRY; EVOLUTION; COSTS; TEMPERATURE; ACQUISITION;
D O I
10.1016/j.jtbi.2024.111854
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Marine mixotrophs combine phagotrophy and phototrophy to acquire the resources they need for growth. Metabolic plasticity, the ability for individuals to dynamically alter their relative investment between different metabolic processes, allows mixotrophs to efficiently exploit variable environmental conditions. Different mixotrophs may vary in how quickly they respond to environmental stimuli, with slow-responding mixotrophs exhibiting a significant lag between a change in the environment and the resulting change metabolic strategy. In this study, we develop a model of mixotroph metabolic strategy and explore how the rate of the plastic response affects the seasonality, competitive fitness, and biogeochemical role of mixotroph populations. Fastresponding mixotrophs are characterized by more efficient resource use and higher average growth rates than slow-responding mixotrophs because any lag in the plastic response following a change in environmental conditions creates a mismatch between the mixotroph's metabolic requirements and their resource acquisition. However, this mismatch also results in increased storage of unused resources that support growth under future nutrient-limited conditions. As a result of this trade-off, mixotroph biomass and productivity are maximized at intermediate plastic response rates. Furthermore, the trade-off represents a mechanism for coexistence between fast-responding and slow-responding mixotrophs. In mixed communities, fast-responding mixotrophs are numerically dominant, but slow-responding mixotrophs persist at low abundance due to the provisioning effect that emerges as a result of their less efficient resource acquisition strategy. In addition to increased competitive ability, fast-responding mixotrophs are, on average, more autotrophic than slow-responding mixotrophs. Notably, these trade-offs associated with mixotroph response rate arise without including an explicit physiological cost associated with plasticity, a conclusion that may provide insight into evolutionary constraints of metabolic plasticity in mixotrophic organisms. When an explicit cost is added to the model, it alters the competitive relationships between fast- and slow-responding mixotrophs. Faster plastic response rates are favored by lower physiological costs as well as higher amplitude seasonal cycles.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Search Before Trade-offs Are Known
    Massala, Otso
    Tsetlin, Ilia
    DECISION ANALYSIS, 2015, 12 (03) : 105 - 121
  • [32] Monetary Policy with Sectoral Trade-Offs
    Petrella, Ivan
    Rossi, Raffaele
    Santoro, Emiliano
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF ECONOMICS, 2019, 121 (01) : 55 - 88
  • [33] Trade-Offs (and Constraints) in Organismal Biology
    Garland, Theodore
    Downs, Cynthia J.
    Ives, Anthony R.
    PHYSIOLOGICAL AND BIOCHEMICAL ZOOLOGY, 2022, 95 (01): : 82 - 112
  • [34] Performance trade-offs in wild mice
    Berberi, Ilias
    Careau, Vincent
    OECOLOGIA, 2019, 191 (01) : 11 - 23
  • [35] Resource-based trade-offs and the adaptive significance of seasonal plasticity in butterfly wing melanism
    Stoehr, Andrew M.
    Glaenzer, Katelyn
    VanWanzeele, Devin
    Rumschlag, Samantha
    ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2024, 14 (05):
  • [36] Predator-induced phenotypic plasticity in larval newts: Trade-offs, selection, and variation in nature
    Van Buskirk, J
    Schmidt, BR
    ECOLOGY, 2000, 81 (11) : 3009 - 3028
  • [37] Compensatory larval responses shift trade-offs associated with predator-induced hatching plasticity
    Vonesh, JR
    Bolker, BM
    ECOLOGY, 2005, 86 (06) : 1580 - 1591
  • [38] Predator-induced plasticity and morphological trade-offs in latitudinally separated populations of Littorina obtusata
    Trussell, GC
    EVOLUTIONARY ECOLOGY RESEARCH, 2000, 2 (06) : 803 - 822
  • [39] Trade-offs between microhabitat selection and physiological plasticity in the Antarctic springtail, Cryptopygus antarcticus (Willem)
    Hawes, T. C.
    Bale, J. S.
    Worland, M. R.
    Convey, P.
    POLAR BIOLOGY, 2008, 31 (06) : 681 - 689
  • [40] Constraints on the evolution of thermal sensitivity of foraging in Trichogramma:: Genetic trade-offs and plasticity in maternal selection
    Carrière, Y
    Boivin, G
    AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2001, 157 (05) : 570 - 581